Advertisement
Advertisement
écossaise
[ ey-koh-seyz, -kuh- ]
noun
- a country-dance in quick duple meter.
écossaise
/ ˌeɪkɒˈseɪz; ekɔsɛz /
noun
- a lively dance in two-four time
- the tune for such a dance
Word History and Origins
Origin of écossaise1
Word History and Origins
Origin of écossaise1
Example Sentences
Miss Brown gave me Beethoven’s Ecossaise in G, which, strangely, had chords not unlike the Joplin rags.
It sounds so pretty in French, p’tit morceau de merde écossaise.
One possible explanation is that their forefathers include a unit of Scottish soldiers - the Garde Ecossaise - who served the French King, Francis I, and were defeated with him at the Battle of Pavia, near Milan, in February 1525.
On Tuesday, Giacometti's "Diego en chemise ecossaise" sold for $32.6 million, a record for a painting by the artist, and several of the top lots went to Asian clients.
The conversation was then directed towards various topics, and at last we got to the 'Ecossaise' we had played at Soleure.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse